Abstract

The majority of patients with curative resection of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma recur within 5 years of resection. However, the prognosis associated with different patterns of recurrence has not been well studied. A retrospective review of patients who underwent curative surgical resection of pancreatic cancer was performed. Of the 209 patients, 174 patients developed recurrent disease. Of these 174, 28(16.1%) had recurrent disease limited to lung metastases, 20(11.5%) had recurrence in the lung plus one or more other sites excluding the liver, 73(42.0%) had liver metastasis alone or liver metastasis with any other site except lung, 28(16.1%) local recurrence only, and 25(14.3%) peritoneal recurrence alone or together with local recurrence. Patients with recurrence limited to lung had a 8.5 months(Mo) median survival from recurrence to death, which was significantly better than the survival associated with recurrence in the liver(5.1Mo), in the peritoneum(2.3Mo) or locally(5.1Mo) in multivariable analyses. Among all groups, the time from surgery to the diagnosis of recurrence in patients who recurred in only in the lung was also the longest. However, 75% of patients were found to have indeterminate lung nodules on their surveillance CT scans prior to the diagnosis of recurrence in lung. This delayed diagnosis of lung recurrence may have a negative impact on survival after recurrence. In conclusion, pancreatic cancer with lung recurrence has a significantly better prognosis than recurrence in other sites. Further studies are needed to investigate how different diagnostic and treatment modalities affect the survival of this unique subpopulation of pancreatic cancer patients.

Highlights

  • Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) continues to carry a very grim prognosis [1]

  • We demonstrate that pancreatic cancer with www.impactjournals.com/oncotarget the first recurrence only in the lung is associated with a significantly better prognosis following recurrence than are recurrences in other sites

  • It should be noted that in our study we found that patients with a first recurrence in lung and at least one additional recurrent site had a similar good prognosis compared to patients with the first recurrence only in the lung

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Summary

Introduction

Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) continues to carry a very grim prognosis [1]. The patterns of recurrence following curative surgery, and the prognosis for patients with different patterns of recurrence, have not been well characterized [3,4,5,6]. Patients with isolated recurrences in the lung have not been comprehensively analyzed surgical resection of solitary PDAC lung metastasis was found to be potentially beneficial [7]. In this present study, we have investigated the patterns of recurrence following surgical resection of pancreatic cancer and found that recurrences limited in lung are associated with a significantly better prognosis than are other recurrence patterns. A better understanding of the patterns of recurrence may provide important insight into developing new diagnostic and management strategies for different recurrent diseases

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